Here is an article about stocking fish from airplanes. Some are killed but the survival rate is higher than backpacking the fish all day into the remote mountain lakes were aerial stocking is usually conducted.

_________________The Walrus

What would a wild walrus whistle if a walrus could whistle wild?

The second mouse may get the cheese but the presentation leaves a lot to be desired.

Here is an article about stocking fish from airplanes. Some are killed but the survival rate is higher than backpacking the fish all day into the remote mountain lakes were aerial stocking is usually conducted.

Ah! Well, thank you, then. Good article. I hadn't even considered remote mountain lakes, nor that backpacking might be the only way to get there by land. I also wasn't considering fingerlings, which makes more sense and shows you what a rugged outdoorsman I'm not. I do think, however, that the added reference to the book An Entirely Synthetic Fish: How Rainbow Trout Beguiled America and Overran the World suggests a hint of rationalization for the rough treatment. Just a thought. I was also surprised to read elsewhere that the Rainbow Trout is one of the top 100 invasive species in the world. Who knew? Mighty tasty, though.

A helicopter could work in some areas, but range and payload are restricted when compared to fixed-wing aircraft. I sometimes use helicopters for seed dispersal in areas that are otherwise difficult to access. We suspend a hopper below the helicopter and the pilot can open and close the orifice to control the release of the contents.

A helicopter could work in some areas, but range and payload are restricted when compared to fixed-wing aircraft. I sometimes use helicopters for seed dispersal in areas that are otherwise difficult to access. We suspend a hopper below the helicopter and the pilot can open and close the orifice to control the release of the contents.

Why not a helicopter - makes more sense - you could almost 'land' on the water.

But that's what a sea plane does, you see. The only practical restriction I can think of is that the lake would have to be big enough for landing and takeoff.

Since the spatial requirements for safe sea plane operation make it impossible to serve all, I went on to search for sea 'copters, but found nothing beyond a YouTube vid of a small recreational-looking one with an open-air cockpit and only room for two passengers. I wonder why the general concept hasn't found greater application, unless, as Crawforde indicated, it's still a matter of not enough range and payload.

A helicopter could work in some areas, but range and payload are restricted when compared to fixed-wing aircraft. I sometimes use helicopters for seed dispersal in areas that are otherwise difficult to access. We suspend a hopper below the helicopter and the pilot can open and close the orifice to control the release of the contents.

Protection is almost always a good idea when attempting to sow oats while airborne. Sometimes what I think is normal, isn’t. There are helicopters with pontoons that can land on the water, but the pontoons are heavy enough that they take up a lot of the payload.

PS. I’ve never sown oats from a helicopter Couls that be a tune title?An just so you don’t think I am completely off, I do wetland restoration and biological storm water treatment for a living.

This next one is quite possibly not wrong ... but I have no idea what it could mean:

BBC website wrote:

Hate U Give lead found criticism 'hard'

I'll have a look at the article ...

OK. Kind of makes sense now I've read what it's about. But it's about as clumsy a way of writing a headline as I have seen. I think the substitution of one word, "actress" (or "actor" if we're being PC) for "lead" would have made things a lot clearer.

This next one is quite possibly not wrong ... but I have no idea what it could mean:

BBC website wrote:

Hate U Give lead found criticism 'hard'

I'll have a look at the article ...

OK. Kind of makes sense now I've read what it's about. But it's about as clumsy a way of writing a headline as I have seen. I think the substitution of one word, "actress" (or "actor" if we're being PC) for "lead" would have made things a lot clearer.

Please, Ben. Just have the good grace to accept that you're no longer au courant. It'll be less embarrassing all around.

But seriously, I agree with you; as it stands, the headline is horrendous writing. Even a simple "The" at the beginning (which is part of the movie's proper title, after all) would at least have gone a long way toward easier reading, even if it still would have left the reader none the wiser.

Sometimes I think these writers make headlines abstruse on purpose, as a lowly tactic to get people to read the article. But it's really hard for me to give them as much credit as that; in the end, I think it's just a case of chops is as chops does.

walrii wrote:

Nanohedron wrote:

Crawforde wrote:

Sometimes what I think is normal, isn’t.

Tell me about it...

Abnormal is the new normal.

You know, it just occurred to me that people haven't told me I'm weird in quite some time, now. Maybe it has nothing particularly to do with me.